The organization that runs Minnesota's high school tournaments says it's working with students, educators and parents to address racist taunts and remarks at sporting events.
Minnesota State High School League Executive Director Erich Martens detailed the organization's plans to state legislators during a House Education Policy Committee meeting Monday. His testimony comes after several schools, from New Prague to Minnetonka, have addressed racism in their sports programs in the past few weeks.
He said recent news reports detailing racist taunting and bullying during high school sporting events don't necessarily correlate with an increase in such incidents. But Martens told lawmakers they represent a troubling trend nonetheless.
"These events clearly indicate that there is more work to do," he said.
Late last week, Martens and Bob Driver, executive director of the Minnesota Association of Secondary School Principals, co-authored a letter to administrators and coaches across the state to remind officials of their responsibilities in addressing harassment during sporting events.
League policy, they wrote, allows officials to suspend athletes for "engaging in harassment or violence at any time, not just during an MSHSL activity." Martens and Driver also reminded school officials that it's their responsibility, not the league's, to monitor crowds for unruly behavior.
They wrote that principals can eject spectators who are "engaging in harassing behavior on school property." Once ejected, Martens and Driver wrote, that person is trespassing if they try to return to the school, emphasizing that trespassing is a misdemeanor.
"This is a powerful tool for dealing with inappropriate behavior by adults, visitors, or other individuals," they wrote.